Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Incumbent president expected to get easy win in Kazakh race

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ASTANA, Kazakhstan — Kazakhstan’s incumbent president is widely expected to secure an easy victory in Sunday’s snap election that came after bloody unrest shook the country this year and he moved to stifle the influence of his authoritar­ian predecesso­r.

Five candidates were on the ballot against President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev. With a short campaign period that began in late October, they had little opportunit­y to mount significan­t challenges. Tokayev, apparently confident of holding a strong advantage, stayed away from a nationally televised election debate.

The national elections commission said voter turnout averaged 69% in 10 of the country’s 15 regions by the time polls closed.

The election for a seven-year term came as Tokayev has taken steps to keep Kazakhstan’s distance from longtime ally and dominant regional power Russia. He pointedly said the country did not recognize the Ukrainian regions that Russia declared to be sovereign states at the outset of the conflict that began in February.

Kazakhstan has taken in hundreds of thousands of Russians who fled after President Vladimir Putin issued a conscripti­on order in September.

When Tokayev became president in 2019 following the resignatio­n of Nursultan Nazarbayev, he was widely expected to continue the authoritar­ian course of the man who had led the resource-rich country since it gained independen­ce from the Soviet Union. Nazarbayev remained highly influentia­l as head of the national security council, and the capital was renamed Nur-Sultan in his honor.

Then a wave of violence arose in January, when provincial protests initially sparked by a fuel price hike engulfed other cities, notably the commercial capital, Almaty, and became overtly political as demonstrat­ors shouted “Old man out!” in reference to Nazarbayev. More than 220 people, mostly protesters, died as police harshly put down the unrest.

Amid the violence, Tokayev removed Nazarbayev from his security council post. He restored the capital’s previous name of Astana, and the Parliament of Kazakhstan repealed a law granting Nazarbayev and his family immunity from prosecutio­n.

 ?? (AP/NUR.KZ/Vladimir Tretyakov) ?? Kazakh servicemen line up to cast their votes next to a poster showing presidenti­al candidates Sunday at a polling station in Almaty, Kazakhstan.
(AP/NUR.KZ/Vladimir Tretyakov) Kazakh servicemen line up to cast their votes next to a poster showing presidenti­al candidates Sunday at a polling station in Almaty, Kazakhstan.

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